Okay, so SD cards are not that exciting, but I take a fair few photos and it's kinda painful to wait forever to transfer files back and forth from the damn cards. So, I thought I'd get a faster card and was kind of surprised to see a 95MB/s SD card by SanDisk (Extreme Pro). There was me thinking no way it's that fast, and to some extent, I was right. That 95MB/s is decimal transfer speeds, not binary. I've known about storage using decimal bits for a while, that's why a 1TB drive is actually 931GB in the OS since the storage is declared as 1000 bytes per kilobyte instead of 1024 (binary) - as reported by the OS. But now companies are reporting speeds in decimal too, so that 95MB/s is actually 92.7MB/s. OK, still damn fast, but is it really?
I saw some of the reviews saying it was fast and all, but no real benches ( that I saw at the time). I bought the card anyway, plugged it in, and saw lightning fast times of 20MB/s. Wait, what? Oh, right, yeah... kinda forgot the whole USB2.0 thing being limited to about 35MB/s minus overhead. So I bought a USB3 card reader too (Kingston if you must know). It arrived, it was installed, then I ran CrystalDiskMark. Well what do ya' know...
Th SD card was an 8GB card formatted to FAT32, default 4K sectors. This is the Crystal default test of 3x runs with 1GB transfer. Good test for HD video recording.
This is 5 runs at 50MB transfer. Does seem that it handles smaller file bursts better - suited to RAW photos.
Surprisingly, it handled rather well. Ok, so the write speed isn't quite up to par, but there can be numerous reasons for that - from the card reader, interference, cable and even the controller. But it definitely shows some rather insane speeds from a humble little SD card. So yes, high-speed SD cards exist, you just need a camera that can support them and a USB3 card reader.
I saw some of the reviews saying it was fast and all, but no real benches ( that I saw at the time). I bought the card anyway, plugged it in, and saw lightning fast times of 20MB/s. Wait, what? Oh, right, yeah... kinda forgot the whole USB2.0 thing being limited to about 35MB/s minus overhead. So I bought a USB3 card reader too (Kingston if you must know). It arrived, it was installed, then I ran CrystalDiskMark. Well what do ya' know...
Th SD card was an 8GB card formatted to FAT32, default 4K sectors. This is the Crystal default test of 3x runs with 1GB transfer. Good test for HD video recording.
This is 5 runs at 50MB transfer. Does seem that it handles smaller file bursts better - suited to RAW photos.
Surprisingly, it handled rather well. Ok, so the write speed isn't quite up to par, but there can be numerous reasons for that - from the card reader, interference, cable and even the controller. But it definitely shows some rather insane speeds from a humble little SD card. So yes, high-speed SD cards exist, you just need a camera that can support them and a USB3 card reader.
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